I’ve been getting into mobile gaming a bit more lately, mostly out of laziness. So naturally, I had to play République, oft listed as one of the highest quality games on iOS and Android. And it is...despite some glaring story problems.

It took me over a year to play through The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess. It’s not a huge game, really, but my noncommittal nature of lazy-casual gaming left me visiting Hyrule only about once or twice a month for a couple hours. Via Gamecube emulation.

Chances are high that you’ve played a Resident Evil game at some point, but the chances of you understanding what’s going on are probably pretty low. This handy graphic helps explain when each game is actually taking place in the main story’s timeline.

By the end of The Last of Us I had no idea how to feel. Hell—I started writing this in September, but I couldn’t bring myself to finish it. I was frustrated and wanted to vent, but I also wanted to express myself with a clear, calm mind. So I’m back and ready to say why I can’t stand the ending to this wonderful game.

As a casual gamer, I usually buy a game, play it through, and then move onto the next one without considering that extra “DLC” nonsense. After trying a few DLC missions, I’ve realized how very, very wrong I was.

I'm not exactly sure why I missed Metro: Last Light when it was first released. I was a huge fan of Metro 2033. I love the STALKER games. I'm obsessed with Russian dystopian science fiction. Yet for whatever reason, I skipped it when it was first released. I'm glad I didn't let it pass by completely though.

It's a little older than the year-old games I usually talk about here, but Tetris is still one of my favorites—and this article from the Boston Globe is one of my favorite video game articles of all time, in which woman who did not know she was good at Tetris broke the world record for the Game Boy version.

I remember renting—yes renting—a Playstation from Blockbuster to play Gex: Enter the Gecko back in 1998. I rented it along with Final Fantasy VII, but fell in love with the wise-cracking reptile and spent most of my rental time with him... Ever run into an old friend and wonder how the hell you got along?

I hadn't played the first BioShock before I began BioShock Infinite. I started this game with no memory or knowledge of past events, only a vague idea of what I was supposed to do next, stumbling from one conveniently placed Voxophone to another, hoping to desperately piece together some kind of context. In other…